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Agents of neuroinfections

Agents of neuroinfections. Institute for Microbiology, Medical Faculty of Masaryk University and St. Anna Faculty Hospital in Brno. Central nervous system infections. relatively rare can have a very serious course

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Agents of neuroinfections

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  1. Agents of neuroinfections Institute for Microbiology, Medical Faculty of Masaryk University and St. Anna Faculty Hospital in Brno

  2. Central nervous system infections • relatively rare • can have a veryserious course • Incidence bacterial meningitis: 2/100.000/year viral meningitis: 10/100.000/year • Lethality bacterial meningitis, non-treated: >70 % treated: ~10 %

  3. Penetration into CNS • From a peripheral focus: by means of blood (meningococci) per continuitatem (pneumococci or haemophili from the middle ear) along nerves (HSV, rabies virus) • Directly: after an injury (pneumococci, staphylococci, nocardiae, aspergilli)

  4. http://www.dcu.ie

  5. Etiology of CNS infections ...depends on the type and the duration of the disease, different in.... 1.meningitis - acute bacterial (purulent)/viral (aseptic) - chronic 2.encephalitis 3. brain abscess– acute or chronic

  6. Cytology and biochemistry of CSF

  7. Etiology ofacute meningitis – I Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  8. www.bakteriologieatlas.de

  9. Etiology ofacute meningitis – II Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  10. Etiology of acute meningitis – III Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  11. Etiology of acute meningitis – IV Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  12. Etiology of acute meningitis – V Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  13. http://bioinfo.bact.wisc.edu

  14. http://images.google.cz

  15. Etiology of acute meningitis – VI Etiology of purulent meningitis by the age in %

  16. Lethality and sequelae of purulent meningitis ....according to etiology

  17. Aseptic (viral) meningitis mumps virus (CNS infection is clinically silent) enteroviruses: echoviruses (30 serotypes) coxsackieviruses (23 + 6 serotypes) tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) rarely HSV and VZV and other neuroviruses rarely some bacteria leptospirae, borreliae, M. tuberculosis

  18. Etiology of chronic meningitis Bacteria: Mycobacterium tuberculosis (meningitis basilaris) Moulds and yeasts: aspergilli Cryptococcus neoformans http://www.icu.cn

  19. Etiology of encephalitis Encephalitis – only acute, of viral origin: - tick-borne encephalitis - HSV - enteroviruses - mumps Mumps parotitis with cervical and presternal edema and erythema

  20. Cystic lesions resulting from accumulation of organisms in perivascular spaces aapredbook.aappublications.org

  21. Etiology of acute brain abscess ........always bacterial: - mixed anaerobic and aerobic flora - staphylococci (both S. aureus and coagulase negative staphylococci) - group A and D streptococci

  22. Etiology of chronic brain abscess Bacteria: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Nocardia asteroides Mycotic organisms: Cryptococcus neoformans (yeast) Parasites: Cysticercus cellulosae (tissue form of pork tapeworm Taenia solium)

  23. Top: Taenia solium cysticerci in the brain of a nine-year-old girl who died during cerebrospinal fluid extraction to diagnose her headaches. This was in the 1970s - if it had happened 10 years later, noninvasive computerized tomography would have given an accurate diagnosis, and the parasites could have been killed with drugs. (Image courtesy of Dr. Ana Flisser, National Autonomous University of Mexico.) Left: A pork tapeworm (T.solium) cysticercus, the form in which the tapeworm is found in an infected brain. (Colorized image by P. W. Pappas and S. M. Wardrop, courtesy of P. W. Pappas, Ohio State University.) http://www.medicine.cmu.ac.th http://eands.caltech.edu/articles/LXVI4/brainworms.html

  24. Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519): Fetus in the Womb (between 1510-1512)

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